Posted 2017-January-24, 11:43
Lamford: You can't give N/S any part of the table result, that's Reveley (even if the infraction was triggered by the TD's misexplanation). If N/S are advised correctly of their requirements, unless RR(!) is going to bid 7♦ all on his own (which I can see, but not once he admits that he knew it was Multi. If he forgot, of course, he might bid the 13-trump sacrifice!) I don't think that "treating N/S as non-offending" is going to make it likely enough that RR will take the sacrifice (after 2♠ or 6) to get any credit for it; if anything, 25% at most?
I don't believe RR's comment, that's classic self-serving commentary based on knowledge of the hand and the result. Swap the ♦Q and A and we'd be hearing "I got my hand across with my pass, why would I ever bid again!" Swap a couple of the diamonds for black cards, and the opponents wouldn't get to 6, never mind make it; and 7♦ would be 800 at least into game. He could have "taken the pressure" off partner 3 different times and chose to pass.
In general: that is the issue with the lead restrictions. With this hand it's irrelevant, but if it turned out that 6♠ was bad (no ♥K, say), but "Win the opening lead, cash the diamond if necessary, pull enough trump to know what's going on (and, with RR's current shape, play enough clubs. Let's pretend the trumps are 3-1, along with no ♥K), and duck a heart into south, force a diamond for the ruff-sluff, make 6", then E/W would get a large percentage (likely 100) of that line, and N/S would still get a large percentage (50+%) of that to go with the 6♠-1, *because after the POOT, even being generous to the "non-offenders" under L82C, this is an obvious line of play*. Doesn't matter that 6♠ can't actually make without the lead restriction. "treated as non-offending" does not equal "gets a good score", even if it's the TD's fault.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)